Monday, September 12, 2016 I Vol. 113 Iss. 6
WWW.GWHATCHET.COM
AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER • SERVING THE GW COMMUNITY SINCE 1904
Hatchet The GW
District House residents deal with post-construction glitches NATALIE MAHER STAFF WRITER
Some students who moved into GW’s newest residence hall were greeted with less-than-pleasant living conditions, residents said. New residents of the $130 million residence hall said they have had issues controlling the temperature in their rooms, water from showers flooded their bathrooms and the building’s promised restaurants have not yet opened. Although students said they were frustrated by these dilemmas, officials and experts say problems are typical of a new building. Within the first few nights in the residence hall, students said they suffered from “permanent heat mode” on their thermostats and are unable to change the temperature in their own rooms. “It’s actually unbearable at times, I can’t stay asleep because I’m sweating in my bed,” sophomore Emily Rosen said. Officials responded to temperature complaints in an email to residents last week, which said that although thermostats read “heat mode,” the air circulating through the vents was cool. Another email that day said workers were addressing air conditioning outages in the building. Residents also said their rooms were flooded because the showers didn’t have edges to prevent water from spilling out.
Kelly Del Percio, a sophomore and District House resident, said she experienced “frustrating” amounts of flooding in her bathroom. “It wasn’t going into the drain because it’s even-level, so gravity’s not really taking effect here,” Del Percio said. University spokesman Brett Zongker said most drain issues were solved by installing shower dam strips. FixIt responders have been responding to complaints about rooms’ temperatures, he said. “The Division of Operations and Clark Construction are making great progress regarding this, and student response has been very positive on both this and the new building as a whole,” Zongker said. Residence Hall Association President Ali Belinkie said District House’s issues are problems that come with any new building. “There’s no way to work out all the kinks until someone lives in it,” Belinkie said. The even flooring in the building’s showers, which caused the flooding, was intentionally designed to make the rooms handicapaccessible, Belinkie added. “They opened them up to the rest of the bathroom and then realized pretty quickly that the water was pouring out, not draining properly,” she said.
GWHATCHET.COM
H
For more on District House and other coverage.
DAN RICH | PHOTO EDITOR
Andrew Zimmerman, the president of the Faculty Association, questioned the Board of Trustees about the composition of the presidential search committee at the Faculty Assembly Friday. Faculty will be able to vote to add members to a consultative committee.
Faculty spar over presidential search diversity, consultations CATHERINE MORAN STAFF WRITER
The Faculty Senate unanimously approved a group of faculty to consult on the presidential search and voted to augment the group with additional members Friday. The faculty consultative committee was selected and initially voted on by the Faculty Assembly — a body made up of all GW faculty — Friday morning. Faculty approved members of the consultative group, which is meant to give more input on the search for GW’s next president, after some questioned the composition of the original search committee and the
role of the consultative committee. The Faculty Assembly approved nine faculty members to the consultative committee, which is assembled for each presidential search, and requested to add seven extra members to increase the diversity of faculty input throughout the search process. Both measures were pending until they were approved by the Faculty Senate that afternoon. “There is a need, an important need, to have better representation, to give a better voice to humanities and the social sciences in the search process,” Charles Garris, the chair of the Faculty Senate’s executive committee, said. “The idea was
that perhaps it wouldn’t be a bad idea to give voice to other parts of the University community.” Faculty members from nine of GW’s 10 schools, excluding the College of Professional Studies, were selected to join the group. Four of them were women — three more than the one female faculty member selected for the official search committee. Throughout the assembly, faculty criticized the selection of faculty for the main search committee, saying it is not representative of minority or female faculty members and did not include faculty See COMMITTEE Page 3
UPD begins new categorization of reported sex crimes LILLIANNA BYINGTON & ROBIN EBERHARDT
Old definition
CONTRIBUTING NEWS EDITORS
Annual average 2010–2015
Sexual abuses
25.17
New definition Sexual abuses Sexual assaults January–August 2016
15
27 total
12
YONAH BROMBERG GABER | GRAPHICS EDITOR Source: University crime log
GW’s crime log now differentiates reports of sexual abuses from sexual assaults, University Police Department Chief RaShall Brackney confirmed last week. Twelve crimes reported to UPD since April have been labeled as sexual assaults — the first time that classification has been used since 2011. UPD started listing sexual crimes differently in the spring to provide a “more accurate description” of crimes on campus, Brackney said. “GWPD routinely reviews and makes enhancements to public documents such as the annual security report and the department’s crime log to provide clear and concise information to the public,” Brackney said. A sexual assault is any unwanted sexual act or behavior to which a person has not given consent. A sexual abuse takes place when someone in a position of power or authority takes advantage of the other person in a sexual manner or activity, Brackney said. Twenty-seven sexual assaults and abuses have been reported so far this year — just one report shy of the 28 total sexual abuses reported during all of last year. Out of the reports in 2016, 15 were considered sexual abuses and 12 were considered sexual assaults. There has also been one attempt to commit sexual abuse reported this year. As sexual assault prevention and response becomes a more popular
national conversation, it’s helpful to add details to related crimes, Brackney said. “The increased awareness has provided increased opportunities for people who previously may have been afraid to open up about their experiences, a network of individuals, groups and safe spaces to step forward and talk about or report their experiences,” Brackney said. The University revamped their sexual assault prevention education efforts last year after 80 percent of students said in GW’s first campus climate survey that they didn’t know how to contact the Title IX Office. One-third of the undergraduate students who reported unwanted sexual behavior also said the University’s responses to those cases were inadequate. A second campus climate survey was distributed last year, but the results of the survey still have not been released about 10 months later. Rory Muhammad, the Title IX coordinator, said more individuals have reached out to the Title IX office. Reports of sexual assault have increased generally, both at GW and nationally, as the dialogue surrounding sexual violence has grown. “An increase in our training, outreach and office visibility has led to more individuals contacting our office,” Muhammad said. Muhammad declined to comment on whether the Title IX office made any changes to reporting or investigating practices and how the Title IX office has
increased its resources to accommodate the increase in the number of reports. Abigail Boyer, the associate executive director of programs for the Clery Center for Security on Campus, said the Clery Act — a law passed in 1990 that requires all universities who receive federal funding to share information about crime on campus — requires universities to give descriptions of crimes but does not dictate which classifications they should use. It’s up to each university to create a policy on how to describe crimes, she said.
“The crime log is designed to be a resource that is easily understood by the community, so using descriptions that the community can understand is always useful.” RASHALL BRACKNEY University Police Department Chief
“The crime log is designed to be a resource that is easily understood by the community, so using descriptions that the community can understand is always useful,” Boyer said. GW’s daily crime log includes a description of the crime, the time and location, whether the University is still investigating the incident and the end result of the crime. Last
year, the University began listing more specific details about the results of crimes reported in the University’s daily crime log: The log now lists when a person reporting a crime was referred to the Title IX office or when a student committing a crime was referred to the Division of Student Affairs. Randy Burba, the chief of public safety at Chapman University and the president of the International Association of Campus Law Enforcement Administrators, said the Clery Act does not require universities to provide every detail of reported crimes, but some choose to provide more information to the public than others. Burba said the law is meant to give basic information about crimes, but that it gives leeway for the University to decide whether to include additional crime information. “The spirit of the law is basically to provide people with information on what’s going on,” he said. “The Clery Act has no requirement to provide any additional summary information.” Jocelyn Jacoby, the co-president of Students Against Sexual Assault, said that transparency for crime statistics should direct University leaders to ways to combat sexually violent crimes. “By the University being more transparent they are taking another step towards addressing the problem of campus sexual assault instead of trying to ignore or hide it,” Jacoby said. —Catherine Moran contributed reporting.
News
VISUALIZED BY CHARLIE LEE | SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER SNAPSHOT
September 12, 2016 • Page 2
CRIME LOG THREAT TO DO BODILY HARM
2000 Pennsylvania Ave. (CVS) 9/6/2016 - 11:30 p.m. Case closed A student reported to University Police Department that he was approached by an individual who accused him of theft. The male student left the store without further incident. No identifiable suspect
STALKING
Mitchell Hall 9/6/2016 - Unknown time Case closed A campus security authority reported that a student was being stalked in the hall. There is limited information on the incident. No further action
Freshman Spencer Bracey moves boxes at North Capitol Commons during Freshmen Day of Service. The apartment building where the students worked will house 60 formerly homeless veterans.
THEFT II/FROM BUILDING/CREDIT CARD FRAUD
Judge dismisses former UPD officer’s discrimination lawsuit
Lisner Hall 9/6/2016 - Unknown time Case closed A staff member reported to UPD that his backpack containing his wallet was taken from an office. His debit and credit cards were used at various locations in and around campus. The backpack was found and returned to him without the cards. No suspects and witnesses
ROBIN EBERHARDT NEWS EDITOR
A judge ruled in GW’s favor in a lawsuit waged by a former University Police Department supervisor who allegedly harassed fellow officers. Todd Ladson sued GW for racial and age discrimination more than two years ago, after he was fired in 2013. The judge dismissed the case because Ladson did not provide substantial evidence of racial and age discrimination, according to the opinion issued Sept. 1. The body of evidence provided by GW showed that the 24-year veteran of the department was fired for sexually harassing female officers about their sexuality and creating “a hostile work environment for his colleagues,” according to the opinion. The opinion, written by U.S. District Court judge Amit Mehta, refutes Ladson’s claims that he was fired for “subjective” reasons, that his
LIQUOR LAW VIOLATION
District House 9/4/2016 - 1:59 a.m. Case closed While on patrol, a UPD officer observed multiple students drinking alcohol in the common area of District House. Referred to DSA
ATTEMPTED THEFT
Public Property on Campus (800 Block of 23rd Street NW) 9/2/2016 - 10:05 - 10:30 p.m. Case closed While on patrol, a UPD officer observed an individual attempting to remove GW property from its location. The unaffiliated male subject was stopped by the officer. The Metropolitan Police Department was notified and the subject was barred from GW property. Subject barred —Compiled by James Levinson I N T E R N AT I O N A L
University investigation was “one-sided” and that white officers were punished more leniently for similar conduct. University spokeswoman Maralee Csellar declined to comment further on the decision. Ladson could not be reached for comment on the case. Tiffany Justice, an officer working under Ladson in UPD, filed a sexual harassment complaint to GW against in March 2013 because he allegedly made “lots of racist and sexually graphic” comments to her that “impacted her safety, her environment, her work performance” and the culture of the shifts that he supervised, according to the opinion document. He was then in a supervisory role as a master patrol officer. Justice claimed that Ladson suggested that she had sexual relations with another officer, Linda Queen. Ladson allegedly warned new officers in the department that the new officer will “have
men and women after her,” according to the document. Queen settled a sexual harassment lawsuit against GW in the spring, after claiming Ladson made sexual jokes in front of her and that two other supervisors harassed her, allegedly keeping her from getting promoted. Ladson alleged that the UPD witnesses testifying against him lied because they were jealous that he was a “popular” and “happy-golucky person,” according to the decision. Then-assistant Title IX coordinator, Tara Pereira, investigated into Ladson’s alleged harassment after Justice’s complaint. She interviewed 13 witnesses and met with Ladson and his union representative multiple times, according to the opinion. Pereira, who declined to provide additional comment on the suit, described Ladson’s behavior as “one of the most significant sexual harassment cases” that she has seen, according to the de-
cision. After Pereira found that Ladson’s behavior was “long-standing” and affected numerous officers, then-UPD chief Kevin Hay met with Pereira, Ladson and a union representative. Hay arranged a formal University hearing, which began Aug. 1, 2013. In the panel, Justice testified that Ladson told another female officer’s parents that their daughter was in a relationship with Justice. Octavia Livingston, a UPD security officer, testified that Ladson “did not approve” of LGBT individuals and told her she should not have sexual relationships with other women, according to the document. Ladson offered a “blanket denial of all allegations” as his opening and closing statements to the panel and did not provide any witnesses in his favor, although he was given “multiple opportunities” to do so, according to the opinion.
Help carry D.C.’s best college newspaper into our 113th year.
Donate to The Hatchet homeforthehatchet.org
STUDY IN ENGLISH
AT TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY
We invite you to study at TAU for a summer, semester, or year abroad, or to earn your next degree – all taught in English! Immerse yourself in culture, knowledge, and innovation in one of the world’s most exciting cities.
SUMMER INSTITUTE
GRADUATE SCHOOL
E admissions@telavivuniv.org
H CENTER FOR STUDY ABROAD
UNDERGRADUATE SCHOOL
T 800.665.9828
INTERNATIONAL.TAU.AC.IL
SEPTEMBER 12, 2016 • Page 3
NEWS
THE GW HATCHET
Students overwhelmingly apply for new transportation grant ELISE ZAIDI ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
A new fund offers transportation grants to students traveling to work at unpaid internships. Students who use public transportation or other modes of transportation to travel to their internships can receive up to $300 per semester through the new grant program. Officials who started the fund say the grants should eliminate an unavoidable daily cost for students that is often overlooked. Rachel Brown, the assistant provost for University Career Services, said the funds will be allocated to students each semester on a rolling and first-come-firstserved basis. All qualified students can apply for the grants until the funding for the semester is depleted. The number of students who have applied for the funds this semester was
greater than the amount allocated, so applications are now closed, Brown said. The application dates for spring internships has not yet been set, according to the Career Services website. All funding for the grants come from donations, Brown added. “Based on the strong student response to our initial launch, we have a strong case to share with current and potential donors about student demand and interest in this fund,” Brown said. Since the transportation grants are a lower dollar value than the traditional unpaid internship grants, career services staff see the transportation fund as an inventive way to help fund students’ internships, Brown said. The traditional grants, which opened in 2013, are reimbursements of up to $3,000 per semester for students who already receive financial aid to pur-
sue unpaid internships. Students can receive transportation grants only once during their time at GW. Students cannot receive the funds for transportation concurrently with other University-provided grants, like the unpaid internship funds or the career development grants, Brown said. The grant is only applicable to “necessarily unpaid” internships, meaning internships at organizations that genuinely lack the resources to pay their interns, like non-profit, governmental or educational organizations, according to the fund’s website. To apply for the funds, students must submit an offer letter from their internships with the organization’s location and an indication that the position is necessarily unpaid. Student Association President Erika Feinman said the fund could encourage students to intern in
OLIVIA ANDERSON | CONTRIBUTING PHOTO EDITOR This was the first semester students could apply for grants to cover the cost of travel to internships.
locations throughout D.C., not just near campus. “Metro costs really add up,” Feinman said. “At the end of the day, it might be anywhere from $3 to $6 per day to Metro back and forth, so it really is a great
fund and I think it will really help students.” GW has focused on adding ways to ensure students can complete internships: In 2015, officials unveiled a program that offered a discounted
cost for earning academic credit for an internship, a requirement of many unpaid internships. And donations for funding grants for unpaid internships hit $200,000 for the year this summer.
Consulting committee to weigh in on presidential search From Page 1
SAM HARDGROVE | ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR
Faculty are adding the number of hours students should spend on their courses to syllabi. Officials encouraged them to add course hours to make sure GW meets accreditation standards.
Faculty recommend new syllabi section on course hours SERA ROYAL ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
Students this semester have noticed a new section on their syllabi: the minimum number of hours they are expected to spend on coursework in and out of class. Officials and faculty members recommended a policy this summer that asks professors to include the numbers of hours students are expected to spend on each course outside of the classroom on their syllabi. This new policy is in response to updated requirements from GW’s accrediting agency, which is set to review GW in 2018, University spokeswoman Maralee Csellar said. As GW begins its reaccreditation process, officials have been working on adher-
ing to the requirements set by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, the agency that accredits GW. One of the requirements is proving that a course adheres to the U.S. Department of Education’s definition of a course hour, which includes the number of hours students are expected to spend on a class, Csellar said. “These general guidelines are just that: general and guidelines. But they should give students a sense of how much time they should plan to commit to courses,” she said. “They are also a reminder to faculty about how much work they should expect of their students.” Csellar said what constitutes a course hour has changed as new types of
courses, like online courses, increase in popularity. Accrediting bodies are more likely to request documentation of the ways in which a university’s courses follow the course hour definition, she said. Officials formed a committee with faculty representatives from each of GW’s 10 schools over the summer to create a policy that follows the U.S. Department of Education’s definition of course hours. The policy is now being “vetted” by a variety of University groups, she said. The Faculty Senate previously passed a resolution asking professors to upload syllabi for courses so that students could know courses’ basic expectations before registering.
of minority or female faculty members and did not include faculty from GW’s humanities departments. The consultative committee is meant to represent all types of faculty members’ goals in the search process, the chair of the Board of Trustees Nelson Carbonell said during the assembly. But he said members of the committee will not be involved in the interview process or know who candidates are. “I hope you appreciate from my standpoint and all of our standpoints that we don’t want to lose candidates because they don’t feel like the process is going to protect them and their integrity at the institution they are at,” he said. “We’re not going to do something to jeopardize that.” Faculty said they thought the consultative committee therefore would not play a big enough role in selecting a president. Andrew Zimmerman, the president of the Faculty Association, questioned what the faculty consultative committee will consult on, given the limited input and information the group will have about the pool of candidates. “Given what we’re just learning about how limited the knowledge of the consultative committee will be about the applicants and the candi-
dates, what exactly will the consultative committee consult on?” he asked. Tyler Anbinder, a history professor, expressed continued concerns that the faculty on the search committee are “so white, so male, so unrepresentative of the overall faculty.” “People on search committees tend to want to hire people who look like them in all sorts of ways,” he said.
“There is a need, an important need, to have better representation, to give a better voice to humanities and the social sciences in the search process.”
CHARLES GARRIS
Chair of the Faculty Senate’s executive committee At the Faculty Senate meeting, members approved the resolution to add seven more members to the faculty consultative committee but continued to question the consulting group’s role and the way it is selected. Garris, the chair of the Faculty Senate’s executive committee, said faculty can nominate candidates for the seven slots through a “Survey Monkey-type” questionnaire. Once the Faculty Senate executive
committee decides on a seven-person slate, the Faculty Senate will vote on the slate as a whole. If the slate is not approved, faculty will discuss the issue at October’s Faculty Assembly meeting. Faculty Senate members said they were concerned about a lack of transparency in the selection process for the consulting committee. Kim Roddis, a professor of civil and environmental engineering, said she was worried that simply approving or not approving an entire slate of seven candidates would take away the democratic process of the election. It would be more fair to vote for individual candidates rather than a slate, she said. “I do think that it would be worth it, even if it takes a little longer,” Roddis said. “It would be worth delaying a week or two weeks if we could have that process seem a little more democratic.” Benjamin Hopkins, an associate professor of history and international affairs, said that to increase transparency, he would like to see the specific reasons the executive committee makes decisions about who is on the slate. “I encourage the executive committee to lay out explicit criteria by which they are recommending those people,” Hopkins said. “It would address those issues of transparency, and there should be some publicly accountable justification of those choices.”
HR leaders to alter makeup of benefits committee VAIDEHI PATEL STAFF WRITER
University leaders are taking steps to keep faculty in the loop on future changes to health care benefits, after faculty complained they were left out of changes for next calendar year. Members of the department of human resources and the Faculty Senate said at Friday’s senate meeting that they will adjust the makeup of the Benefits Advisory Committee — the group of employees tasked with providing feedback to the administration on proposed benefits changes — to include equal representation from faculty and staff. Faculty said this summer that they disapproved of changes to GW’s health care options, and they weren’t consulted on the changes until it was too late.
Charles Garris, the chair of the Faculty Senate’s executive committee, said at the meeting that he and the other members of the executive committee will work with Ann McCorvey, the deputy executive vice president and treasurer, to reorganize the committee. The committee will include five faculty members and five staff members, instead of the original six faculty and 10 staffers. “I realize that a substantial number of faculty members and senate members remain unsatisfied with the current situation and could not believe that the administration is willing to act in a more collaborative way going forward,” he said. “But I am very hopeful that the Faculty Senate and administration will be able to work together in good faith for the welfare of the University.”
DAN RICH | PHOTO EDITOR Charles Garris, the chair of the Faculty Senate’s executive committee, said during a meeting Friday that he has discussed ways to ensure faculty input on benefits
GW changed health benefit options to offer two plans, a PPO plan and a highdeductible plan that was re-
branded as a savings plan. These options could result in more out-of-pocket costs and higher deductibles.
When the new benefit options were announced over the summer, some faculty members said they felt
they did not have adequate time to provide feedback. Harald Griesshammer, an associate professor of physics, said at the meeting that he was concerned about the validity of the changes. “This past summer was a very unpleasant experience for many of us,” he said. “Many of us have become increasingly skeptical and disillusioned with human resources when it comes to benefits.” McCorvey assured the group that human resources leaders want to create a mutually beneficial relationship with faculty and staff. “It is our desire to have a more collaborative relationship with the senate,” she said. “We want to bring something forward that is acceptable and reasonable within our fiduciary responsibility.”
Opinions
September 12, 2016 • Page 4
STAFF EDITORIAL
Georgetown should not be alone in their efforts to confront the past, and we should use it to inspire equity in higher education. GW was not built by slaves, and no one sold slaves to fund the University’s survival, but GW profits from the name recognition of our nation’s first president, who was a slave owner. University officials should acknowledge that George Washington owned slaves and proactively make amends by creating a scholarship fund for descendants of slaves to attend GW. Slavery is part of our nation’s history, and the effects of that history reverberate today. While GW should not guarantee admission to descendants of slaves, officials should make it easier for those people to receive quality educations. For years and
Hatchet
(202) 847-0400 www.gwhatchet.com News tips ext. 207 Advertising ext. 203 Business ext. 202 2148 F St. NW Washington, D.C. 20052 news@gwhatchet.com opinions@gwhatchet.com sports@gwhatchet.com culture@gwhatchet.com photo@gwhatchet.com multimedia@gwhatchet.com
ext. 207 ext. 209 ext. 207 ext. 206 ext. 211 ext. 206
FROM
THE FORUM
blogs.gwhatchet.com/theforum
It’s been 15 years since 9/11, and we should use the anniversary to remember to support our community.
—BONNIE MORRIS, A SENIOR FELLOW AT THE GLOBAL WOMEN’S INSTITUTE, writes. • published Sept. 8
A
s a child, I spent a lot of time in my mother’s hometown about 100 miles outside of Pittsburgh. This small, charming dot on the map has a population that is 97 percent white. Needless to say, I stood out with my tan skin, dark eyes and curls. My unusual features sometimes elicited questioning looks, pointed fingers and snide remarks. A few weeks after my fifth birthday, my mother and I stood in line at her favorite childhood restaurant. The bell on the entrance door dinged and an older couple entered. They took one look at me and my fair-skinned mother and commended her for adopting me. At the time, I was too young to understand how offensive this comment was but old enough to sense that it made my mother uneasy. The comment highlighted the ignorance that surrounds my ethnic ambiguity. If I had a penny for every time someone has asked me “What are you?,” I could likely pay the full tuitions of every student in my class at GW. From strangers on the street to job interviewers to professors, the question does not seem off limits to anyone. My initial response is always the same: “I am human.” Then I usually elaborate on my ethnicity. As easy as answering the question of “what I am” seems, it used to be hard for me. I hopelessly longed to blend in without being singled out. Now, however, I am proud to share that I am Egyptian American. But getting to this point was no easy feat. My parents, a small-town Pennsylvanian and an Egyptian immigrant, met at a restaurant in Pittsburgh in the early 1990’s. My father, eager to contribute to his new country, quickly joined the Marine Corps. My father
years, families of former slaves have been left behind. Just because slavery ended doesn’t mean the effects don’t carry over to our lives today. It’s up to GW, and other universities, to start making amends. University spokeswoman Candace Smith said officials are continuing to consider how GW is connected to slavery, but at this point, they don’t have any official plans. “We will continue to discuss and explore the institution’s history regarding slavery and segregation with students and other members of our community this year,” Smith said. A scholarship fund for slaves’ families would fit in with officials’ recent goals to diversify our student body. The University continuously makes announcements about initiatives that would make GW more accessible and diverse. Students bring more than their transcripts and resumes to a university: They bring their perspectives. And GW officials should want to do anything they can to diversify perspectives — including those of former slaves’ families — by making sure students have the means to get here. As a society, we should take actions — however comparably small to the harm that has been done — to reconcile past atrocities. We do not need to try to erase our history, but institutions of higher education have the opportunity to rectify the impasses our society created for African Americans. A scholarship would not give students a leg up in the admissions process. Rather, after they are accepted to the University, they would have money to pay for it. It’s a way to help deserving students finance their educations if they couldn’t otherwise — and that’s something every university should endorse. GW has the opportunity to be a trendsetter. We aren’t the first school to take action to atone for slavery, but there’s no reason we shouldn’t set an example by being one of the first institutions to make sure descendants of slaves can achieve quality higher education. Other universities would certainly have the opportunity to follow in GW’s footsteps: The fourth U.S. president James Madison was also a slave owner. James Madison University hasn’t directly benefited from slavery or Madison’s ownership of slaves. Similarly, George Mason — a delegate to the Constitutional Convention in 1787 — was a slave owner, and a university bears his name, too. As a university, we should set standards. And this is a standard GW should be proud to set. As more colleges announce their own plans for acknowledging the wrongfulness of slavery in the past, GW should seize the opportunity to set an example and do something that would truly benefit students who are slaves’ descendants.
The GW
Further comments on decision in favor of GW in discrimination lawsuit p. 2
The journey to embracing my mixed ethnicity
GW should make its mark in atoning for slavery Slavery in the U.S. was not a practice constrained to large plantations in the Deep South. Slavery was an institution right here in D.C. and in the closely surrounding areas. Georgetown University’s history is entangled with slavery, and officials at Georgetown are doing more than just acknowledging that the university directly benefitted from it — they are apologizing and taking action. Maryland Jesuitowned slaves were sold by Georgetown in 1838 to save the university from going under. Earlier this month, Georgetown officials announced that the university would provide preferred admission to descendants of slaves owned by the Maryland Jesuits. Preferred admission means that these students’ applications would be considered in the same way that legacy students’ are. Georgetown University president John DeGioia announced the preferred admission plan after a Georgetown committee discussed ways to atone for the university’s profits from slavery. DeGioia also issued a formal apology for the university’s ties to slavery. The Hatchet’s editorial board could not come to a consensus on whether Georgetown’s preferred admission plan is a satisfying first step in atoning for the direct ways the institution benefitted from slavery. But it doesn’t really matter what we think because we are not Georgetown students. However, we believe that universities, including GW, should take the situation at Georgetown as a signal to acknowledge their own ties to slavery. Georgetown should not be alone in their efforts to confront the past, and we should use it to inspire equity in higher education. Countless universities have ties to slavery, and GW has its place in this discussion.
WHAT THE UNIVERSITY WON'T TALK ABOUT THIS WEEK
proposed to my mother before leaving for boot camp, and they soon tied the knot, despite reluctance from both of their families. They knew very little about my father and his ethnic background but eventually accepted him. My father’s family — almost 6,000 miles away in Egypt — did not get to meet my mother before she shared their last name. With time, they came to love her as one of their own. Two years later, I was born. My parents named me Sarah — a name that has both Western and Arab roots.
Sarah Abdelkahlek Writer My first language is English, but I have picked up some Arabic over the years, thanks to my paternal grandmother’s favorite Arabic-dubbed Turkish soap operas. She taught me the importance of serving guests with the finest tea and biscuits, burning bukhoor to freshen the house and making enough baklava to cover the thousands of miles between here and Egypt. She urged me to take pride in my heritage. This, however, proved to be a lot easier said than done in a post-9/11 world. In a time when anyone with dark features and a complicated, Arabicsounding last name was labeled a “terrorist” or “terrorist sympathizer,” it seemed imperative to distance myself from some parts of my culture. For a long time, I desperately clung to things that made me “white.” I thought that packing a peanut butter and jelly sandwich for lunch instead of leftover koshary would make me more normal. I thought spending hours straightening my hair would make me more
relatable. I thought that associating more with my mother ’s white side of the family would make me more “American.” Maintaining this facade was exhausting. It was not until my junior year of high school when I realized the error of my ways. I was compiling pictures for a class project and stumbled upon old photos of our family trip to Egypt in 2008. In that moment, I was overcome by nostalgia, unhappiness and regret — mostly regret, though. Starting college was a pivotal moment in my journey to explore my mixed identity. I was surrounded by a diverse crowd: 3.5 percent of my fellow undergraduate students identify as multiple races. I recently learned that there is even a student organization at GW for those who are mixed race. For instance, I met one of my best friends, who is half-German and half-Lebanese, in a religion course my freshman year. We immediately bonded over the struggle of having language barriers in the house and feeling divided on religious holidays. We discussed how difficult it can be to form an identity when we feel we don’t fully fit because we’re only “half”. Although staying true to both distinct halves of who I am has not always been effortless, I would not want it any other way. You can catch me walking around campus shamelessly blasting Amr Diab or Justin Timberlake, with a Tasty Kabob gyro or Chick-fil-A sandwich in hand.
GW, follow other institutions when considering adding student trustees
M
Cartoon by Julia Korsyn
en and women in suits will never know GW as well as the students here do. We know what works and what doesn’t, since we experience GW day in and day out. And officials are taking an important step in connecting with students: The chairman of the Board of Trustees announced he would create a task force to consider adding a student representative to the Board of Trustees. Still, the question is not whether GW should have student representation, but how the board can reorganize itself to include a student. GW isn’t the first school to deal with the issue of student representation: Ohio State University added student voices to their board while making sure they can act as an independent unit. The University’s Board of Trustees consists of 18 members, two of whom are student trustees — one is an undergraduate student, and the other is a graduate student. The two students are allowed to vote on committees and can attend executive meetings. Students who want to be trustees apply to be chosen by a selection committee. Ellie Smith, editor in chief
Jacqueline Thomsen, managing editor Eva Palmer, managing director* Ryan Lasker, development director Nathan Walker, web developer Robin Eberhardt, news editor Melissa Holzberg, opinions editor* Mark Eisenhauer, sports editor Melissa Schapiro, copy editor Grace Gannon, culture editor* Zach Slotkin, design editor Dan Rich, photo editor Blair Guild, video editor Victoria Sheridan, social media director Tyler Loveless, homepage editor* Yonah Bromberg Gaber, graphics editor Avery Anapol, assistant news editor Elise Zaidi, assistant news editor
Sera Royal, assistant news editor Justine Coleman, assistant copy editor Sam Hardgrove, assistant photo editor Halley Rogers, assistant video editor Lillianna Byington, contributing news editor Irene Ly, contributing opinions editor* Matt Cullen, contributing sports editor* Regina Park, contributing culture editor Olivia Anderson, contributing photo editor Jake Amorelli, contributing video editor Liz Provencher, research assistant Crystel Sylvester, research assistant Catherine Moran, research assistant Emily Robinson, design assistant Anna Skillings, design assistant * denotes member of editorial board
@gwhatchet @hatchetsports @hatchetalumni @hatchetbusiness
The student body has no say in who is chosen to be the trustee, which ensures that the trustees are not influenced by students. The University’s Board of Trustees should have at least two student trustees who have different experiences on campus, like an undergraduate and a graduate student, to ensure that all types of the students are represented.
Laura Castro Lindarte Writer Student Association president Erika Feinman made similar suggestions in their campaign platform last year. The board must lay out specific policies that student trustees would have to follow. The Board of Trustees should control what student representatives can vote on so that they don’t create conflicts of interest or vote on something they don’t totally understand. Student trustees should have access to all committee meetings and should be
able to discuss delicate matters with the board. Voting on certain referenda could become too difficult for student trustees like salaries or other financial matters. Although Ohio State’s formula seems to work, employing a slightly different selection system could also work for GW. Cornell University allows their student body to vote on which students will represent them. If GW proceeded to add students to the board, it would make the most sense to have students apply to the selection committee and then have the student body vote on the selected candidates. The Board of Trustees should be selective, but students should have the ability to choose who is best fit to represent their interests. GW is taking a big, important step by considering adding student representation to its Board of Trustees. If done right, this could guarantee future students’ involvement in University decision-making. —Laura Castro Lindarte, a sophomore double-majoring in journalism and political science, is a Hatchet opinions writer.
Devon Davenport, business manager
Dayna Weintraub, executive assistant Tyler Famiglietti, accounting director Andrew Shlosh, senior account representative Justin Berk, account representative Matthew Rosal, account representative
Sheldon Wong, account representative Danielle Zurkoff, account representative Taryn Faherty, IT specialist Justin Berk, distribution manager Quinn Stevenson, distribution manager
Submissions — Deadlines for submissions are Friday 5 p.m. for Monday issues. They must include the author’s name, title, year in school and telephone number. The GW Hatchet does not guarantee publication of any submissions and reserves the right to edit all submissions for space, grammar and clarity. Electronic submissions are preferred. Opinions Editor w letters@gwhatchet.com Policy Statement — The GW Hatchet is produced by Hatchet Publications Inc., an independent, non-profit corporation. All inquiries, comments and complaints should be addressed to the Board of Directors, which has sole authority for the content of this publication, at the paper’s address. Opinions expressed in signed columns are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the view of The GW Hatchet. All content of The GW Hatchet is copyrighted and may not be reproduced without written authorization from the editor in chief.
Distribution — The GW Hatchet is distributed to more than 80 locations on and off campus. A single copy is free to each reader; additional copies cost 50 cents each in the business office. Mail subscriptions are available for $125 per year.
Culture
September 12, 2016 • Page 5
YOUNG THE GIANT WITH RARA RIOT
ANGEL OLSEN WITH ALEX CAMERON
MAUMERO NEW YORK POPUP SHOP
Celebrate Young the Giant’s third album “Home of the Strange” at their D.C. performance.
Catch the indie rock singer Angel Olsen and her raw voice at the 9:30.
Love for Maumero New York, a charitable shoe brand, is hosting a pop-up shop this weekend.
9:30 Club Sept. 14 • $35
WHAT’S TRENDING THIS WEEK
9:30 Club Sept. 15 • $20
The Fathom Gallery Sept. 15 • Free
# VETERANSFORKAEPERNICK
Alumnus turns passion for comic books into career GRACE GANNON CULTURE EDITOR
With a full slate of Marvel superhero movies coming to theaters near you, you’ll also want to keep an eye out for superhero comic books by an alumnus. Roye Okupe, who earned both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in computer science from GW, recently released his second graphic novel about a Nigerian superhero, which he said he hopes will become a TV show or movie. Without one of the courses Okupe took at GW, he said he may have never pursued a career in comics. Okupe released the first novel of his superhero saga last summer and released the second last month. His comics aim to address social issues in Nigeria, from poverty to corruption, but also highlight the country’s culture and progress, he said. “I talk about the great things you can see in Africa, which is our rising technology, our resilience as a community, our humor, the way we talk to each other and just the general nature of Nigeria and Lagos as a city as well,” Okupe said. Okupe collaborated with four artists in Nigeria remotely from his apartment in Rockville, Md. to create the books. He developed the characters and storylines, while artists in Nigeria drew the cover and interior art. While it would have been easier to work with artists in the area, Okupe wanted to showcase Nigerian talent, he said. Okupe’s journey to cre-
ating comic books began in Lagos, Nigeria, where he grew up, he said. “Growing up, I was glued to the TV watching things like Superman, Batman, Transformers, Ninja Turtles and all the other great superhero titles, and I immediately fell in love with the concept of the superhero story,” Okupe said. When he followed in his sister’s footsteps and came to the U.S. for college, Okupe pursued a practical degree in computer science but held onto his dreams of drawing comics. After transferring to GW from Montgomery College in Rockville, Okupe took a computer animation class that he said changed the course of his career. It was after completing his first assignment for the class that Okupe realized he had some talent. He animated his favorite Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle, Leonardo, he said. “The instructor was walking around looking at everybody’s work. He tapped me on the shoulder and was like ‘Roye, this looks really good’ and literally that was the moment where I thought maybe I can eventually do something with this for a living,” Okupe said. After graduating with his bachelor’s degree, Okupe continued to teach himself animation through online programs, and he enrolled in drawing classes at the Art Institute of Washington. To guarantee a steady income during the financial recession in 2009, Okupe enrolled in a master’s pro-
JORDAN MCDONALD | SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Roye Okupe, who earned both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in computer science from GW, recently released his second graphic novel about a Nigerian superhero.
gram in computer science at GW. After working as a web developer for a few years, Okupe saved enough money to produce a trailer for a potential comic book series. He collaborated with storyboard artists and designers, while he coordinated the project and worked on the postproduction elements, including sound and color editing. The series — titled “E.X.O.: The Legend of Wale Williams” — follows
a 20-something-year-old Nigerian man named Wale Williams who wears an exoskeleton of armor. The series is set in the loosely fictional town of Lagoon City, which based on Okupe’s hometown. After distributors didn’t pick up the eight-minute trailer for a full series, Okupe decided to build a fan base more organically by going back and creating a graphic novel for the character so that fans would be invested
in the story by the time a series or movie was released. He set up two fundraisers for the first graphic novel, which was released last summer. After that, Okupe quit his full-time job as a web developer to freelance, so he could have more time to work on his comics. With his second novel released this August – the final entry in the Wale Williams saga – Okupe is now working on a graphic novel featuring a 15th century
West African queen. Okupe said that if he can change the path of his career to follow his passion, anyone can. “Somehow I’ve been able to achieve so many things that I didn’t think I would achieve this quick, and the reason why is because of hard work and persistence,” Okupe said. “Knowing that within each and every one of us there’s something we’re burning to give out into the world.”
Top dishes to try when District House vendors open
ANNE MCBRIDE | HATCHET STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER From left to right: Chick-fil-A’s spicy chicken sandwich and Beef N’ Bread’s Chinatown roast beef sandwich. Students can enjoy these dishes when both vendors open storefronts in District House sometime this fall.
CRYSTEL SYLVESTER & MAX MCCRORY STAFF WRITERS
Everyone on campus is talking about District House and the vendors that will fill the J Street-sized holes in our hearts. We still don’t know for sure when these restaurants will open, but all of the future vendors currently have storefronts in D.C. We sampled the restaurants’ food and drinks so you know exactly what to order when they finally open on campus. Beef N’ Bread: Chinatown Roast Beef
Chick-fil-A: Spicy Chicken Sandwich
GRK Fresh Greek: Pork Yeero
Sol Mexican Grill: Al Pastor Street Tacos
Wiseguy NY Pizza: Margherita
Peet’s Coffee & Tea: Pumpkin Chai Latte
Beef N’ Bread features a variety of sandwiches, salads and milkshakes, but it’s no surprise that a restaurant with “beef” in the title slices a good roast. The Chinatown roast beef sandwich ($8.99) combines two of the restaurant’s staple sauces — wise sauce and jalapeno sauce — to create the perfect blend of spicy and savory flavors. A slice of avocado and tomato adds crisp balance, with cilantro and basil topping off the medley.
Chick-fil-A is known for its classic chicken sandwiches, but the spicy version ($3.29) adds a kick that sets the sandwich apart from the rest of the menu. It’s got enough flavor without burning your tongue and pairs well with their ever-greasy, yet delicious, waffle fries ($1.55). Be warned that the Chick-filA coming to campus is an express version, meaning it won’t have the full menu that’s available at the nearby Columbia Heights and Crystal City locations.
GRK Fresh Greek offers a variety of Mediterranean food, but the yeero — how the menu spells gyro — is by far the best. There are countless tzatziki and meat choices for endless combinations. The pork yeero ($8.10) with the traditional GRK tzatziki sauce is made with scallions, cucumber, mint and lemon zest that mix cool, crunchy and savory flavors together in a warm pita.
Sol Mexican Grill is like Chipotle because customers can create their own meals, but the restaurant’s traditional Mexican street tacos set the menu apart. The al pastor street tacos ($3.00 per taco) are filled with juicy and flavorful pork, cooked onions, tangy cilantro, spicy salsa taquera, creamy avocado and crisp radishes to create a satisfying flavor combination. Unfortunately, Sol Mexican Grill is like Chipotle because you’ll have to pay extra for guacamole.
New York is known for having the best pizza in the U.S., which GW students from the Empire state will be quick to remind you. Wiseguy NY Pizza lives up to the authenticity of a New York slice. The Margherita ($2.99 per slice) — the most traditional Italian pie — combines sweet tomato sauce, chewy mozzarella, fresh basil and flaky parmesan cheese to make all of your pizza dreams come true. If you want to take the healthy route, go for the fresh mozzarella salad ($3.99), which contains the same ingredients of the pizza in a caprese style.
Get into the spirit of fall, no matter the season, with the pumpkin chai latte ($4.05). A twist on the classic chai latte, this drink features light spices to warm you up when the weather finally cools off. Try pairing it with a chicken chorizo flatbread ($4.45) for a breakfast delight. Peet’s serves breakfast until an hour before closing, so you can enjoy this combination whenever you have a hankering.
Help keep the lights on at GW’s independent student newspaper: Visit homeforthehatchet.org
H
Sports
September 12, 2016 • Page 6
WOMEN’S SOCCER
v.s. Georgetown 3 p.m. • Thursday The Colonials look to remain undefeated against their crosstown out-of-conference rival.
NUMBER CRUNCH
11
VOLLEYBALL
GW Invitational Friday-Saturday GW will host James Madison, NIU and Tennessee at the Smith Center.
Number of seconds between junior cross country runner Miranda DiBiasio and the 6K Salty Dog Invitational’s second-place finisher on Saturday. DiBiasio won the race in 22:42.04.
Lightbourn clinches win over Navy with last-second header
ANDREW GOODMAN | SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Juniors Christian Lawal (left) and Koby Osei-Wusu (right) make a play during GW’s 1-0 win over Navy Sunday afternoon, the team’s first victory since Aug. 26.
MARK EISENHAUER SPORTS EDITOR
Through 89 minutes of play against Navy on Sunday afternoon, men’s soccer’s dominant offensive effort had gone unrewarded. Despite outshooting the Midshipmen 16–0 and spending the majority of the match in its opponent’s defensive third, GW found itself knotted in a scoreless tie. But with just over 10 seconds remaining, the Colonials were awarded their 12th
corner kick of the day. Sophomore midfielder Alastair Berry wasted no time delivering the ball into a frantic scrum in front of the net. The hurried set piece found the head of Dylan Lightbourn on the near post, who snuck the game winner past Navy’s goalkeeper to lift GW to a 1–0 victory with only four seconds to spare. “Coach is always telling me to get near post, and I just saw that ball coming in from Alastair, it was a great cross and I knew I was going to get
my head on it,” the sophomore forward said. “The whole day we were getting great service into the box — we just couldn’t finish — but luckily I just found the right spot at the right time.” The bounceback win comes four days after the Colonials (2–1–2) dropped a 2–0 decision at Loyola (Md.), the team’s first and only loss thus far this season. Head coach Craig Jones was pleased with his squad’s response during Sunday’s matinee. “Today I thought was
our best performance overall over 90 minutes possessionwise. Sometimes you need a little bit of luck — well not so much luck, it was a great header actually,” Jones said. “We’re creating [scoring chances], we just haven’t been scoring, and today we got one.” And while GW’s offense has not been overtly highpowered — having combined for just three goals over its first four games — its defensive unit has continually kept them in games. Starting goalkeeper Thor
Arne Hofs had a quiet outing as Navy (1–2–1) recorded zero shots on net but was still tabbed for his second shutout of the 2016 campaign. “Dfensively, we shut them down,” Lightbourn said. “Their counterattack, that’s their forte honestly, and we did a really great job of just not allowing them to turn and come at us. We definitely improved from last game.” GW’s attack, however, caused problems for the Midshipmen’s backs all afternoon. The Colonials’ best
chance of the first half came in the 38th minute from senior midfielder Garrett Heine. On a free kick just outside of the box, Heine fired a bullet to the top-left corner of the net but was denied by an impressive save over the crossbar. A flurry of chances also came late in the second half off a number of good services into Navy’s 18. Junior midfielder Koby Osei-Wusu, senior defender Ben Ogedegbe and freshman midfielder Colin Anderson all came within inches of finding the go-ahead goal. The one that finally came marked just the second goal of Lightbourn’s collegiate career. On Sunday, the 6-foot3-inch sophomore played 65 minutes up top. “Obviously he didn’t see much of the field last year but coming in for preseason he looked good, he worked hard over the summer,” Jones said. “As a forward you’ve got to be at the right place at the right time and he’s done that twice this season so far. I thought today his movement was good, he held the ball up, he was strong — he was just a handful. So he deserved that goal.” Lightbourn’s game-winner also handed him a new title: leading scorer. His two goals this season now pace all Colonials, while Heine and junior midfielder Oliver Curry trail close behind with one goal apiece. “It feels kind of crazy honestly,” Lightbourn said. “I was just hoping to get good playing time this year but to think I’m the leading goal-scorer on a team with so many great players — like Garrett, who was one of the leading scorers in the conference [last season] — it’s just surreal.” The Colonials will try to pick up their third non-conference win Tuesday when they travel to take on ACC foe Wake Forest at 7 p.m.
Men’s cross country takes strides toward successful season finish MATT CULLEN CONTRIBUTING SPORTS EDITOR
In a humid heat at the United States Naval Academy Golf Course Saturday, the men’s cross country team took another step toward success for the season. GW finished the day in second place out of five teams in the Navy Invitational, which included victories over Loyola (Md.), UMBC and McDaniel. The Colonials finished in fourth place at the same event last year. Although Navy won the invitational with ease, the Colonials viewed the meet as an opportunity to be compared to top teams. “We knew it was going to be hot, and we knew the Navy guys were going to be ready to run, so we just let them handle the pace,” junior Ryan DePinto said. “They will be one of the top five teams on the whole East Coast, so they are a good benchmark to see how we stack up.” DePinto ran in front of his teammates for the majority of the race. He finished ninth overall and first for the Colonials with a personal best time of 25:45.27 in the eight kilometer race. Senior Seamus Roddy (26:19.10) and junior Charles Arnold (26:34.02) came in second and third, respectively, for GW – reducing their times from
last year by significantmargins. The improvements boost head coach Terry Weir’s confidence that the squad he labeled as “developmental” last year will be able to take the next step forward and compete for the Atlantic 10 championship. “Every year we have the goal of reaching the A-10 Championship, but we also have to make sure that we are setting realistic goals,” Weir said. “This year, I expect us to make the jump. Getting to that top third, the top five or six, is a great goal for us this year, and I think it is very doable.” Weir said the team continues to mature and pay attention to details, which has led them to improve. “These guys have done a lot of running, so you can see their fitness,” Weir said. “Now it is about going through and talking tactics and things they can do better. Before they were just running. Now it is about understanding things like positioning better.” GW completed its inaugural track and field season in the spring. Some of the cross country runners transitioned to indoor track last winter and ran outdoor track in the spring, so they were running and competing all year long. The cross country team is able to recruit more easily with the added track program, and runners can stay
ADD US ON SNAPCHAT Scan our Snapcode
MARK EISENHAUER | HATCHET STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Junior Ryan DePinto kicks at the end of the 8K Navy Invidational Saturday. DePinto ran a peronal best 25:45.27 time, leading GW to finish second out of five teams.
in competition shape, Weir said. “We need to offer them the opportunity to run year round with the best in the NCAA,” Weir said. “It has helped us out with recruiting the serious athletes.” But the extra season challenged some young distance runners to maintain motivation and abil-
FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM @GWHatchet
ity throughout the year, Weir said. The Colonials are counting on the older members of the team, especially captains senior Jordan Pantalone and junior Chris Shaffer, to lead the way and support their teammates. “What is different with distance runners is we have three A-10 championships
to get ready for, so they are really in season from the end of August until May,” Weir said. “Our captains are really extremely important to bring the team over the long haul and keep the guys together, keep them motivated.” With three of the squad’s top four runners slated to return for the 2017
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @GWHatchet
season, the team is in a position to steadily improve, reach its goals and make an impact in the A-10 over the next two years. “I am excited for these guys,” Weir said. “We only have a few seniors this year, we are still a young team and this is by far our deepest and maybe even our best team so far.”
LIKE US ON FACEBOOK /GWHatchet